Obesity and hypertensive heart disease: focus on body composition and sex differences

被引:0
|
作者
Giovanni de Simone
Costantino Mancusi
Raffaele Izzo
Maria Angela Losi
L. Aldo Ferrara
机构
[1] Federico II University Hospital,Hypertension Research Center
[2] Federico II University Hospital,Department of Translational Medical Sciences
[3] Federico II University Hospital,Department of Advanced Medical Bioscience
来源
Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome | / 8卷
关键词
Obesity; Hypertension; Left ventricular mass; Body composition;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
There is evidence that hypertension is frequently associated with overweight/obesity even in kids and adolescents. Either conditions influence development of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (LVH), through different biological and hemodynamic mechanisms: obesity is conventionally thought to elicit a coherent growth of LV chamber dimensions and myocardial wall thickness (eccentric LV geometry), whereas a more accentuated increase in wall-thickness (concentric LV geometry) is attributed to hypertension. While during youth these differences are visible, proportion of LV concentric geometry, the most harmful LV geometric pattern, sharply raises in obese individuals during middle age, and becomes the most frequent geometric patterns among obese-hypertensive individuals. Two conditions with elevated hemodynamic impact, severe obstructive sleep apnea and masked hypertension contribute to the development of such a geometric pattern, but non-hemodynamic factors, and specifically body composition, also influence prevalence of concentric LV geometry. Contrasting a general belief, it has been observed that adipose mass strongly influences LV mass, particularly in women, especially when fat-free mass is relatively deficient. Thus, though blood pressure control is mandatory for prevention and reduction of LVH in obese hypertensive patients, without reduction of visceral adiposity regression of LVH is difficult. Future researches should be addressed on (1) assessing whether LVH resulting from alteration of body composition carries the same prognosis as pressure overload LVH; (2) defining tissue characterization of the hypertrophic heart in obese-hypertensive patients; (3) evaluating whether assessment of hemodynamic loading conditions and biological markers can help defining management of the association of obesity with hypertension.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Obesity and hypertensive heart disease: focus on body composition and sex differences
    de Simone, Giovanni
    Mancusi, Costantino
    Izzo, Raffaele
    Losi, Maria Angela
    Ferrara, L. Aldo
    DIABETOLOGY & METABOLIC SYNDROME, 2016, 8
  • [2] Body composition and heart rate variability: relations to age, sex, obesity and physical activity
    Lopez Sanchez, G. F.
    Lopez Sanchez, L.
    Diaz Suarez, A.
    SPORT TK-REVISTA EUROAMERICANA DE CIENCIAS DEL DEPORTE, 2015, 4 (02): : 33 - 40
  • [3] Sex Differences in Body Composition Early in Life
    Fields, David A.
    Krishnan, Sowmya
    Wisniewski, Amy B.
    GENDER MEDICINE, 2009, 6 (02) : 369 - 375
  • [4] Sex differences in disease activity and efficacy of treatment in spondyloarthritis: is body composition the cause?
    Ibanez Vodnizza, Sebastian
    van der Horst-Bruinsma, Irene
    CURRENT OPINION IN RHEUMATOLOGY, 2020, 32 (04) : 337 - 342
  • [5] Sex differences in body composition and association with cardiometabolic risk
    Schorr, Melanie
    Dichtel, Laura E.
    Gerweck, Anu, V
    Valera, Ruben D.
    Torriani, Martin
    Miller, Karen K.
    Bredella, Miriam A.
    BIOLOGY OF SEX DIFFERENCES, 2018, 9
  • [6] Body composition in Colombian schoolchildren: Differences by sex and age
    Vidarte Claros, Jose Armando
    Velez Alvarez, Consuelo
    Arango Arenas, Alejandro
    Parra Sanchez, Jose Hernan
    NUTRICION CLINICA Y DIETETICA HOSPITALARIA, 2019, 39 (03): : 154 - 161
  • [7] Sex differences in body composition and association with cardiometabolic risk
    Melanie Schorr
    Laura E. Dichtel
    Anu V. Gerweck
    Ruben D. Valera
    Martin Torriani
    Karen K. Miller
    Miriam A. Bredella
    Biology of Sex Differences, 9
  • [8] Hypertensive Heart Disease and Obesity A Review
    Saliba, L. Joseph
    Maffett, Scott
    HEART FAILURE CLINICS, 2019, 15 (04) : 509 - +
  • [9] Body Composition and Mortality in Patients With Coronary Heart Disease - "The Obesity Paradox"
    DeSchutter, Alban
    Lavie, Carl J.
    Milani, Richard V.
    Patel, Dharmendrakumar A.
    Artham, Surya M.
    CIRCULATION, 2010, 122 (21)
  • [10] Body Composition and Survival in Stable Coronary Heart Disease Impact of Lean Mass Index and Body Fat in the "Obesity Paradox"
    Lavie, Carl J.
    De Schutter, Alban
    Patel, Dharmendrakumar A.
    Romero-Corral, Abel
    Artham, Surya M.
    Milani, Richard V.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2012, 60 (15) : 1374 - 1380